Hello,
In response to growing concerns about early childhood development in a digital age, the UK government has advised that children under the age of five should not have more than one hour screen time daily, with under-twos avoiding solo screen use. The guidance encourages “screen swaps” like reading or playing together.
While parents say that busy lives, costs, and technology make this hard, research shows a 25% drop in daily parent-child play since 2019. Experts say such interaction is vital for emotional and language development.
Meanwhile, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell convened Wall Street leaders over a very different frontier: the risks posed by advanced AI.
The meeting focused on concerns that Anthropic’s new model, Mythos, could usher in a new wave of cyber threats, with officials urging banks to strengthen their defenses.
In other news, four astronauts from NASA’s Artemis II mission safely splashed down in the Pacific Ocean on Saturday after a flawless return from their lunar flyby.
They are now aboard a recovery ship following a nine-day journey that carried them farther from Earth than any humans before.
In today’s newsletter, we will talk about
- Faster breast cancer detection
- Tekion’s AI-native pivot
Here’s your trivia for today: What time is displayed in every iPhone advertisement?
Innovation
Faster breast cancer detection

From remote villages to urban clinics, UE LifeSciences is rethinking breast cancer screening with iBreastExam, a pain-free device designed to overcome cultural, logistical, and medical barriers. By prioritising comfort and accessibility, the company is bringing early detection closer to millions of women who might otherwise avoid screening.
Key takeaways:
- iBreastExam enables fast, pain-free breast screening without radiation, specialised infrastructure, or highly trained personnel, making it usable in both rural and urban settings.
- The device uses sensor technology and embedded AI to identify abnormal tissue changes instantly, helping flag potential risks at an early stage.
- It acts as a primary screening solution that funnels high-risk cases to mammography or ultrasound, improving overall screening coverage and efficiency.
Artificial Intelligence
Tekion’s pivot to an AI-native tech company

As AI reshapes the software landscape, traditional SaaS companies are under pressure to reinvent themselves. Tekion’s bold shift to becoming an AI-native organisation shows how early, decisive transformation, despite internal skepticism, can unlock faster innovation, improved productivity, and stronger customer outcomes.
Key takeaways:
- Tekion chose to disrupt itself before others could, proving that proactive transformation is more effective than reactive change.
- Internally, engineering efficiency improved significantly, while externally, AI-driven insights and automation enhanced customer experience and business outcomes.
- Success wasn’t just about integrating AI, it involved rethinking product design, workflows, and organisational culture, alongside implementing strong governance and trust frameworks.
News & updates
- Sam Altman: San Francisco police arrested a person for allegedly throwing a Molotov cocktail at OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s home and for making threats outside the AI startup’s headquarters.
- Carbon Credit: Microsoft Corp. staff have informed certain carbon removal credit developers that the company is temporarily halting what is currently the world’s largest initiative funding the removal of CO₂ from the atmosphere.
What time is displayed in every iPhone advertisement?
Answer: 9:41 AM (The time Steve Jobs unveiled the original iPhone)
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Original Article
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